GeoDaze 2014 was made possible by generous donations from SONSHINE EXPLORATION BALFOUR HOLDINGS, Inc. INDIVIDUALS Megan L. Anderson Gerard and Byoung Sun Beaudoin Thomas H. Biggs Elwood and Della Brooks Carlotta Chernoff Jean Cline Gary and LeeAnn Colgan Michael and Marian Fellows Gregg Garfin Terrence M. Gerlach and A. Litasi-Gerlach Christopher Greenhoot John M. Guilbert and Dorothy J. Harelson James and Diane Hays John Hoelle Gary and Yvonne Huckleberry Owen Hurd William Willis Jenney, Jr. Richard D. Jones Peter L. Kresan Michael Kutney and Sarah Tindall Robert and Barbara Laughon Naomi Levin John R. Matis Stephanie McAfee and Adam Csank Leslie D. McFadden Norman M. Meader Nancy and Charles Naeser Sara Lynn Peyton and Richard J. Bottjer Richard and Martha Pfirman Dr. Bernard Pipkin William and Susan Purves Miles G. Shaw Sponsors listed as of March 27, 2014. Later sponsors will be acknowledged on the website. Cover photo by Luke Parsons (www.LukeParsonsPhoto.com) WELCOME We are pleased to welcome you to the 42st annual GeoDaze! GeoDaze is a long-standing research symposium organized by student volunteers from the Department of Geosciences featuring groundbreaking research from undergraduate and graduate students. Each year, GeoDaze is made possible by generous donations from individuals and corporate sponsors. We sincerely appreciate your continued support! GeoDaze allows students to present their research to an enthusiastic audience of faculty, industry professionals, peers, and the general public. GeoDaze collaborates with five other departments in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences (SEES) to bring you EarthWeek, a celebration of scientific research to promote interdisciplinary discussion, collaboration, and exposure for all of the participating departments. A full schedule of EarthWeek events is included on page 5 of this program. We encourage you to take advantage of all that EarthWeek has to offer. This year GeoDaze is proud to present 31 oral and 23 poster presentations from Geosciences graduate and undergraduate students. The diversity of these presentations is reflective of the Department of Geosciences’ drive to integrate earth science research “from core to clouds”. They include research in economic geology, tectonics and geochemistry, geophysics, paleoclimate, climate dynamics, paleoecology, and detrital zircon geochronology. In addition, one representative from the Department of Geosciences has been selected to participate in the EarthWeek Plenary Session, “Scaling the World”, featuring six interdisciplinary talks by representatives from each of the SEES departments. GeoDaze is proud to host Dr. Stephanie Prejean from the USGS Alaska Volcano Observatory as our keynote speaker. Dr. Prejean is a research geophysicist and seismologist specializing in the physics of earthquake rupture with a focus on volcanically active areas, and Association for Women Geoscientists Distinguished Lecturer. We invite you to attend Dr. Prejean’s presentation entitled “Forecasting Eruptions at Alaskan Volcanoes: High Stakes Science in Real Time” at 10:30 AM on Friday, April 11th in the North Ballroom. In accordance with tradition, many exciting “extracurricular” events will take place during GeoDaze. The GeoDaze slide show will surely embarrass and entertain at 11:30 AM on Friday. Soon after, our panel of faculty judges will present awards for the best talks and posters in each session as well as the overall runner-up and best talk award. All attendees of GeoDaze are invited to attend the GeoDaze party, Friday evening. The margaritas will be flowing and the sunset will be beautiful at the home of Dr. George Zandt and Dr. Susan Beck. Make sure to save some energy for the GeoDaze field trip on Saturday. This year the trip will focus on mid-Cenozoic deposits of the San Pedro Valley, east of Tucson. Led by Dr. Jay Quade and Alexis Licht, this field trip will teach you about the Cenozoic paleotopographic evolution of southern Arizona during the early phase of subsidence in the Basin and Range. We would like to thank all of those that helped with organizing GeoDaze this year. Without your tireless efforts GeoDaze could not be the success it is! Shaunna Morrison and Adam Hudson Co-Chairs, 2014 GeoDaze Symposium 2 COMMITTEE Co-chairs…………………………………….Adam Hudson and Shaunna Morrison Outreach…………………………………………………………..………….Phil Stokes Audio/Video………………….…………….Drew Laskowski and Jamie Worthington Publications…..…………………………………..Erin Harris-Parks and Kate Metcalf Treasurer………………………………………………………………………Ted Cross Slideshow…………………………………………………………………..Devon Orme Field Trip…………………………………….…………..Caitlin Orem and Ryan Leary Refreshments……………………………..…...Hector Zamora and Drew Laskowski Webmaster…………………………………………………………………..Alissa Scire Awards…………………………………………..Gloria Jimenez and Andrea Stevens Correspondence…………………….…………Kat Compton and Barbara Lafuente Registration……………………………….…....Garrison Loope and Jonathan Delph DEPARTMENT OF GEOSCIENCES INFORMATION Department of Geosciences The University of Arizona Gould-Simpson Building 1040 E. 4th Street Tucson, AZ 85721 Phone: 520-621-6000 Fax: 520-621-2672 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS GeoDaze 2014 Donors……..…………………………………………….1 GeoDaze 2014 Welcome...………………………………………………2 GeoDaze 2014 Committee………………….……………………………3 EarthWeek Schedule………………………………….…………………..5 GeoDaze Schedule of Events Day 1 Thursday, April 10……………………………………6-11 Economic Geology Climate and Paleoclimate Geophysics GeoDaze Poster Session Day 2 Friday, April 11………………………………………11-13 Tectonics and Geochemistry GeoDaze Keynote Speaker Stephanie Prejean Slideshow Awards and Closing Remarks EarthWeek Plenary Poster Session EarthWeek Oral Plenary Session “Scaling the World: Study from Microscopic to Global Scale” EarthWeek Keynote Speaker Marcia McNutt GeoDaze Dinner Party! Maps and Directions…………………………………………………14-16 Field Trip Guide…………………………………………………..………17 Download a complete version of the GeoDaze 2014 Program with Abstracts: http://earth.geo.arizona/geodaze/14/schedule.html 4 EarthWeek Schedule Tuesday, April 8 Bryant Bannister Tree-Ring Building Tuesday, April 9 Lobby LTRR Building Tours and Informal Talks Wednesday-Friday, April 9-11 Student Union Memorial Center Level 3 North Ballroom Wednesday, April 9 Thursday, April 10 Friday, April 11 El Día del Agua Oral Sessions GeoDaze Oral Sessions GeoDaze Oral Sessions Poster Session Awards and Slideshow EarthWeek Plenary Session Oral Session Keynote: Dr. Marcia McNutt South Ballroom El Día del Agua Lunch Address: All Posters Catalina Room SWESx Oral Sessions Rincon Room AIR Oral Sessions 5 All Posters GeoDaze Thursday, April 10, 2014 8:00-8:15 Welcome and Coffee 8:15-10:15 Economic Geology SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Christian Rathkopf 8:15 PALEOGEOGRAPHIC AND PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS OF IRON-OXIDE COPPER GOLD AND SEDIMENT-HOSTED COPPER DEPOSITS: IMPLICATIONS FOR ORE-FORMING PROCESSES Ada R. Dominguez 8:30 SCALE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF VARIABILITY IN DOLOMITE ALTERATION AT THE TENKE-FUNGURUME CU-CO DISTRICT (TFM) OF THE CENTRAL AFRICAN COPPERBELT Isabel Fay 8:45 THE DISTRIBUTION OF RHENIUM CONCENTRATIONS IN MOLYBDENITE IN ORE DEPOSITS Christian Rathkopf 9:00 MAGMATIC FLUXES IN THE ANDEAN COASTAL BATHOLITH, NORTHERN CHILE James D. Girardi 9:15 EPITHERMAL MINERALIZATION ASOCIATED WITH DIATREME BRECCIA AND RHYOLITIC DOME, LA MIEL, HAITI: PRELIMINARY RESULTS. Mauro Joel Melgar Pauca 9:30 THE JACKSON-LAWTON-BOWMAN NORMAL FAULT SYSTEM, EUREKA DISTRICT, CENTRAL NEVADA Aryn K. Hoge 9:45 NORMAL FAULTS IN THE YERINGTON DISTRICT, WESTERN NEVADA: RECONSTRUCTIONS BASED ON NEW STRUCTURAL DATA FROM THE ANN-MASON AND BLUE HILL AREAS Carson Richardson 10:00 GEORGIUS AGRICOLA’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO HYDROGEOLOGY Isabel Fay 6 10:15-10:30 BREAK 10:30-12:00 Climate and Paleoclimate SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Luke Parsons 10:30 THE CONTEXT OF SOUTHWEST NORTH AMERICAN MEGADROUGHT Cody Routson 10:45 PATTERNS AND PROCESSES OF DROUGHT IN THE NORTHEAST UNITED STATES Connor Nolan 11:00 INFLUENCE OF ATLANTIC OCEAN CIRCULATION ON AMERICAN TROPICAL RAINFALL AND CARBON BALANCE Luke A. Parsons 11:15 U.S. NORTHEAST COAST 2009-2010 ANOMALOUS SEA LEVEL RISE EVENT Paul Goddard 11:30 RAPID SEA LEVEL RISE ON THE EAST COAST OF THE US ANALYZED VIA GPS Alexandria Will-Cole 11:45 THE MICROMORPHOLOGY OF YOUNGER DRYAS-AGED BLACK MATS: A PALEOENVIRONMENTAL AND COMPOSITIONAL ANALYSIS OF UNUSUAL DESERT SEDIMENTS Erin Harris-Parks 12:00-1:00 LUNCH 1:00-2:45 Geophysics SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Jamie Ryan 1:00 VARIATIONS IN LITHOSPHERIC STRUCTURE, SLAB GEOMETRY, AND SURROUNDING MANTLE UNDER THE NORTH CENTRAL ANDES FROM TELESEISMIC TOMOGRAPHY Alissa Scire 7 1:15 CRUSTAL SCALE FAULTS ABOVE THE PERUVIAN AND ARGENTINIAN FLAT SLAB SEGMENTS Brandon T. Bishop 1:30 CRUSTAL THICKNESS OF THE CENTRAL ANDEAN PLATEAU FROM TELESEISMIC RECEIVER FUNCTIONS Jamie Ryan 1:45 SHEAR WAVE VELOCITY STRUCTURE OF THE ANATOLIAN PLATE; IMPLICATIONS FOR PRE-COLLISIONAL TECTONICS Jonathan R. Delph 2:00 PRESENT-DAY LOADING RATE OF FAULTS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AND NORTHERN BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO, AND POST-SEISMIC DEFORMATION FOLLOWING THE M7.2 APRIL 4, 2010, EL MAYOR-CUCAPAH EARTHQUAKE FROM GPS GEODESY Joshua Spinler 2:15 SEISMIC IMAGING OF THE MAGMATIC UNDERPINNINGS BENEATH THE ALTIPLANO-PUNA VOLCANIC COMPLEX FROM THE JOINT INVERSION OF SURFACE WAVE DISPERSION AND RECEIVER FUNCTIONS Kevin M. Ward 2:30 INVESTIGATING CONNECTIONS BETWEEN LARGE-MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKES AND ACTIVE ASEISMIC CREEP ON THE ALTO TIBERINA LOW ANGLE NORMAL FAULT, ITALY Lily J. Jackson 2:45-3:00 BREAK 3:00-5:00 GeoDaze Poster Session SUMC South Ballroom Poster presentations from all GeoDaze participants will be on display during both this session and during the Friday EarthWeek/Plenary Poster Session. Economic Geology G01: PALEOCLIMATE AND PALEOGEOGRAPHIC RECONSTRUCTIONS OF SEDIMENT-HOSTED COPPER AND IRON-OXIDE COPPER GOLD DEPOSITS: A MORE DETAILED VIEW Emily Ryan 8 G02: U-PB GEOCHRONOLOGY OF LARAMIDE MAGMATISM RELATED TO CU-, ZN-, AND FE- MINERALIZED SYSTEMS, CENTRAL MINING DISTRICT, NEW MEXICO Jason D. Mizer G03: FE OXIDE-CU MINERALIZATION AT THE MINNESOTA AND PUMPKIN HOLLOW DEPOSITS, YERINGTON DISTRICT, NEVADA Simone Runyon Climate and Paleoclimate G04: THE SEASONALITY OF COCCIDIOIDOMYCOSIS: PREDICTING VALLEY FEVER OUTBREAKS IN ARIZONA Angelica Alvarez G05: PACIFIC SEA-LEVEL VARIABILITY AND THE SURFACE WARMING HIATUS Cheryl Peyser G06: THE SPECTRUM OF ASIAN MONSOON VARIABILITY Garrison Loope G07: TRAVERTINE FROM EGYPT’S WESTERN DESERT: A TERRESTRIAL RECORD OF NORTH AFRICAN PALEOHYDROLOGY AND PALEOCLIMATE DURING THE LATE PLEISTOCENE Gloria Jimenez G08: IMPACT OF WIND AND ICE BIASES ON SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON AND HEAT UPTAKE Jessica F. Rudd G09: REVISITING THE AGE OF ZUNI SALT LAKE MAAR IN WEST-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO Jill Onken G10: LOI DATA FOR TOTAL ORGANIC AND TOTAL INORGANIC CARBON IN THE TUGEN HILLS AND WEST TURKANA REGIONS OF KENYA Kojo Plange G11: LAKE MALAWI SEDIMENT RECORD PROVIDES CLUES ON CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND RESPONSE TO MOUNT TOBA SUPER-ERUPTION Lily J. Jackson 9 G12: A SHOT IN THE DARK ON PAST CLIMATE CHANGE: ELEMENTAL RECORDS FROM AN ARIZONA SPELEOTHEM Louis Shanley G13: POWER SPECTRAL ANALYSIS OF LAKE LEVELS: VARIATIONS IN STRUCTURE AND SCALING IN LAKE LEVEL FREQUENCY SPACE Zachary C. Williams Geophysics G14: INVESTIGATION INTO THE CAUSE OF A LARGE MAGNETIC ANOMALY IN SOUTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA Clinton Koch G15: CAMPAIGN GPS STUDY AT JOSHUA TREE NATIONAL PARK PROVIDES HANDS ON EXPERIENCE FOR STUDENTS AND VALUABLE DATA FOR THE JOSHUA TREE INTEGRATIVE GPS NETWORK (JOIGN) Harry Telajah G16: EFFECT OF THE 2010 EL-MAYOR CUCAPAH EARTHQUAKE ON GPS OBSERVATIONS IN THE SOUTHERN BASIN AND RANGE James Broerman G17: SLIP ON THE SUCKLING HILLS SPLAY FAULT DURING THE 1964 ALASKA EARTHQUAKE Jay Chapman G18: NEW VELOCITY ESTIMATES FROM THE PUNA ANDES GPS ARRAY Phillip McFarland G19: PLATE BOUNDARY ZONE DEFORMATION ASSOCIATED WITH PANAMA-SOUTH AMERICA COLLISION USING GPS Wadyan O. Ayyad Tectonics and Geochemistry G20: THERMOCHRONOLOGY OF MONTANA RIVER SANDS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE TIMING OF EXHUMATION OF LARAMIDE RANGES Mariah C. Romero-Armenta G21: DETRITAL GEOCHEMICAL FINGERPRINTS OF RIVERS ALONG THE INDUS-YARLUNG SUTURE ZONE IN TIBET: IMPLICATIONS FOR DRAINAGE EVOLUTION, TIMING OF ARC DEVELOPMENT AND EROSION Mohd Faiz Hassim 10 G22: ZIRCON AGES FROM THE AMOLE ARKOSE, TUCSON MOUNTAINS Nick Hillemeyer G23: GEOLOGIC INVESTIGATION OF FRACTURE INTENSITY IN THE ESCABROSA LIMESTONE AT KARTCHNER CAVERNS STATE PARK, AZ Wesley Wilkins GeoDaze Friday, April 11, 2014 8:00-10:15 Tectonics and Geochemistry SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Kendra Murray 8:00 TECTONIC SIGNIFICANCE OF CRYSTAL-FIBER QUARTZ VEINS IN RECREATION REDBEDS (JURASSIC), BROWN MOUNTAIN: EXPRESSION OF CALDERA COLLAPSE IN THE TUCSON MOUNTAINS, ARIZONA Jean Villena-Celis, Christopher Young 8:15 PROVENANCE OF THE INDUS-YARLUNG SUTURE MÉLANGE AND THE ONSET OF TETHYAN HIMALAYA-ASIA COLLISION, SOUTHERN TIBET Kathryn Metcalf 8:30 EARLY FORELAND BASIN DEPO-SYSTEMS IN THE SOUTH-CENTRAL ANDES OF ARGENTINA, 32˚S -35˚S Elizabeth Balgord 8:45 TWO-PHASE EXHUMATION OF SUBDUCTED INDIAN PASSIVE MARGIN METASEDIMENTARY ROCKS IN THE LOPU KANGRI RANGE, SOUTH-CENTRAL TIBET Andrew Laskowski 9:00 MULTI-THERMOCHRONOLOGIC DATING OF LEUCOGRANITES FROM THE SOUTH TIBETAN DETACHMENT SYSTEM AT RONGBUK VALLEY, MT. EVEREST, TIBET Devon A. Orme 9:15 THE STRUCTURE AND STRATIGRAPHY OF THE LESSER HIMALAYA OF CENTRAL NEPAL Edward Cross 11 9:30 TECTONIC SIGNIFICANCE OF THE GISSAR UNIT, SOUTHERN TIAN SHAN, TAJIKISTAN James Worthington 9:45 LATITUDINAL VARIATIONS IN ANDEAN EXHUMATION REFLECTED IN DETRITAL APATITE FISSION RECORD OF MODERN RIVER SANDS Andrea Stevens 10:00 OLIGOCENE LACCOLITHS ON THE COLORADO PLATEAU: A KEY TO UNDERSTANDING CENOZOIC COOLING AND CANYON CUTTING Kendra E. Murray 10:15-10:30 BREAK 10:30-11:30 GeoDaze Keynote Speaker SUMC North Ballroom Dr. Stephanie Prejean, Research Geophysist, USGS “Forecasting Eruptions at Alaskan Volcanoes: High Stakes Science in Real Time” 11:30-12:30 GeoDaze 2013 Slideshow and Awards Located in the North Ballroom of the Student Union. 12:30-2:00 EarthWeek/Plenary Poster Session SUMC South Ballroom Poster presentations from all EarthWeek participants, including GeoDaze. 2:00-4:00 Plenary Session SUMC North Ballroom 2:00 WILDFIRE OVER MULTIPLE TIME SCALES: THE DOMINANCE OF POST-WILDFIRE DENUDATION IN THE LONG-TERM EVOLUTION OF FORESTED, MOUNTAINOUS LANDSCAPES Caitlin Orem, GEOS 2:20 CONTINENTAL-SCALE DRIVERS OF WILDFIRE ACTIVITY IN EASTERN SIBERIA Christopher Guiterman, LTRR 2:40 INVESTIGATION OF THE ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENTS ASSOCIATED WITH TROPICAL CYCLONE SIZE CHANGES Diana Stovern, ATMO 12 3:00 DIRECT PLANTING AS PHYTOSTABILIZATION STRATEGY: OVERCOMING CHALLENGES IN ACIDIC METALLIFEROUS MINE TAILINGS IN THE SOUTHWESTERN USA Juliana Gil-Loaiza, SWES 3:20 SCALING AND EXTREME VALUE ANALYSIS OF HYDROGEOLOGICAL VARIABLES WITH APPLICATION TO NEUTRON POROSITY DATA IN OILFIELDS Tongchao Nan, HYDRO 3:40 CONNECTING CLIMATE IMPACTS TO DECISION MAKING: THE ROAD LESS TRAVELED Zack Guido, SNRE 4:00-5:00 Plenary Keynote Address SUMC North Ballroom Dr. Marcia McNutt, Editor-in-chief, Science magazine “Entering the Era of the Geosciences” 6:30-11:00 GeoDaze Dinner Party Address and map on page 16 13 UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA CAMPUS MAP STUDENT UNION IS BUILDING No. 19 (BLACK CIRCLE) AND GOULD SIMSPSON BUILDING No. 77 (BLACK SQUARE) 2156 2171 209 211 220 460 Visitor Parking Zone 1 Restricted Area South of Sixth St. Lots Closed to Traffic Lot Specific Permit Parking Construction Controlled from 7Aï9P) ( !,1#$0"ʺ 230 2235 222 Buildings Street Specific Permit Parking Car Share Location 204 Parking Garages Hourly Parking Pay Station Hourly Parking Motorcycle Parking 559 206 201 2153 231 2241 2155 <35);,&'ʹB$&4-­‐‑3=& 412 26 5067* 79/79A 87 84 106 83 FJ!#ICM 132 5072* Árbol de la Vida Hall Posada San Pedro Entrance Sixth St. Garage Sonora Hall 45 5084 5161 7228 7227 $)/0)#A30)#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 94&1>/0#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 7103 !"ʺ#$&-­‐‑&/07#$0"ʺ D)1%;&,,#C-­‐‑&"ʺ D7 &44* #C-­‐‑ &"ʺ :)403/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ D7 &44* #C-­‐‑ &"ʺ I)44&/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ +3G&BE&'ʹ&5043)/#2/'ʹ&4%)55 I)44&/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 96B 95 61M 61 !"ʺ#!38707#$0"ʺ 423 6097 POOL 8106 6 6098 62 Rec. Field 62A 7 8110 8112 8178 117 Football Practice Field Frank Sancet Field 8138 117 117 7105 60 6092* !"ʺ#$3607#$0"ʺ Likins Hall 117 96 Visitor & Permit Parking Arizona Stadium 59 96A !/G&#<4"ʺ 58 131 182 McKale Center 115 Entrance 50/50A 6090* 7156 7102 E)4G#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 121 140 96 C 118 121-A 181 Entrance 7167 94 Cherry Ave. Garage Entrance LaPaz Hall Visitor & Permit Parking 120 55 !"ʺ#9>@407#$0"ʺ 52 122 Villa del Puente 45B 5083 :)403/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ # L3/&#C-­‐‑&"ʺ .387,)/'ʹ#C-­‐‑&"ʺ )/#2/'ʹ&4% )55 89 90 88 ?>(&,, 123 57 53 93B 5 6093 6092* 180 A E&'ʹ&5043 46 82 6089 Hopi Hall Graham Hall Greenlee Hall 99 93 92 70 Main Library 56 6088 6088 43 5183 5244 5242 Arizona Hall Coronado Hall 54 38 4 100 4057 91 63 113 44 107 31 41 :>@/0)3/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ N*/'ʹ),,#C-­‐‑&"ʺ $>@07#D)1%@5#<4"ʺ 32 34 33 !"ʺ#9>@407#$0"ʺ 81 77 78 5073 U.A.P.D. 93C .)(07>4/& 4063 68 37 35 4144 4059 4062 17 40 36 4164 4177 65 ILC 27 5075 4121 93A 19 28 29 129 64 67 21 30A 5066 4058 Old Main 30 160 5162 23 105 3 !"ʺ#93450#$0"ʺ !"ʺ#$&=>/'ʹ#$0"ʺ 69 66 Student Union 25 !"ʺ#2/3-­‐‑&4530*#+,-­‐‑'ʹ"ʺ 432 Entrance 20 Entrance Second St. Garage Visitor & 114 Permit Parking 8179 8111 !"ʺ#$&-­‐‑&/07#$0"ʺ L3/&#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 3175 24 3140 136 Parker House 4054 74 .387,)/'ʹ#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 158 B H)1&5#!"ʺ#A>8&45#I)* FJ!#ICM E)4G#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 158 12 Pima House Yuma Hall 4056 4052 151 D)1%;&,,#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 11 !"ʺ#$%&&'ʹ()*#+,-­‐‑'ʹ"ʺ 2152 Babcock 8229 8230 !"ʺ#!38707#$0"ʺ :)403/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 10 9 8 109 135 128 2025 109 J)0K,#D7)1%3>/5#<4"ʺ Maricopa Hall Gila Hall 3233 !"ʺ#$&=>/'ʹ#$0"ʺ Entrance !@=,3'ʹ#C-­‐‑&"ʺ :>@/0)3/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ Coconino Hall 112 2030 2032 I)44&/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 438 71 202 !"ʺ#.&,&/#$0"ʺ 2136 444 2 2029 2119 2021 203 202 240 D7&44*#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 3038 76 3141 241 D7&44*#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 6 159 5 72 134 3231 7/7A F,3-­‐‑&#A'ʹ"ʺ Manzanita/ Mohave Hall (”Manzymo”) :>@/0)3/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 104 3039 73 155C 2146 155J 150 2180 1018 3113 75A Fine Arts Center !"ʺ#93450#$0"ʺ 177 103 4 Entrance 119 Permit Entrance 3 417 Entrance Entrance 199 75 2147 416 E),1#<4"ʺ N*/'ʹ),,#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 2 85A 470 176 +3G&BE&'ʹ&5043)/#2/'ʹ&4%)55 !"ʺ#$%&&'ʹ()*#+,-­‐‑'ʹ"ʺ 85 174 1016 108 Visitor & Permit Parking Entrance 1157 428 Entrance 116 Park Ave. Garage Entrance Tyndall Ave. Garage Visitor & Permit Parking 456 1225 207 !"ʺ#:);&,#$0# # Highland 190 Garage Visitor & Permit Parking +3G&B !"ʺ#.&,&/#$0"ʺ 1173 1232 1233 2012 2182 1172 1239 1115 420 221 2226 L3/&#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 197 Main Gate Garage Visitor & Permit Parking $)/0)#A30) 94&1>/0 1224 1237 E)4G#C-­‐‑&"ʺ# 1240 !"ʺ#:);&,#$0"ʺ 483 2168 2181 !"ʺ#<4)=71)/#$0"ʺ 433 1 206 205 Misc. Lots: SV, Loading, Disabled !"ʺ#<4)=71)/#$0"ʺ 212 2165 (M-F 7:00am-4:30pm) 1142 Permit Required 2167 466 Legend: 2236 A3/8#A'ʹ"ʺ I)44&/#C-­‐‑&"ʺ 2013 - 2014 Campus Parking Map 215 8 14 MAP OF STUDENT UNION ALL TALKS WILL BE LOCATED IN THE NORTH GRAND BALLROOM ALL POSTERS WILL BE LOCATED IN THE SOUTH GRAND BALLROOM 15 MAP FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA (A) TO SUE BECK and GEORGE ZANDT’S HOUSE (B) FOR DINNER PARTY Dinner service and open bar provided by El Saguarito will begin at 6:30 pm. 16 Fieldtrip Paleoelevation and tectonic implications of the Oligocene Mineta formation in the Taran Wash of the San Pedro River Valley Saturday, April 12, 2014 8 am – 5 pm http://earth.geo.arizona.edu/geodaze/14/trip.html Led by Alexis Licht and Ross Waldrip. The excursion will focus on the Mid Cenozoic (35 - 20 Ma) deposits of the San Pedro Valley. They consist in two geological units, namely the Mineta and San Manuel Formations, cropping out extensively in an isolated area only known by ranchers, on the foothills of the Galiuro Mountains, approximately 1.5 hours east from Tucson. Both units are unique in documenting the early phases of the subsidence of the Basin and Range region. They also recorded the almost complete unroofing of the high-altitude ranges that once connected the Rockies to the central Mexican highlands, constituting a former 'Mexicanoplano'. During this fieldtrip, you'll learn about: • The complex interplay between tectonics, sedimentary supply and lacustrine deposits • Paleoaltimetry reconstruction methods • The Cenozoic (<65 million years) paleotopographic evolution in Arizona Moreover, you'll have the opportunity to see preserved fossil animal tracks dated at ~30 million years that are definitely worth the trip. The GeoDaze Field Trip will leave Saturday, April 12th, 2014 at 8 AM from the Gould-Simpson loading dock, returning around 5 PM. Lunch boxes from Silver Mine Subs will be provided. Vegetarian-friendly options are available and can be requested when registering for GeoDaze. Transportation Each participant will have a place reserved in a high-occupancy van or approved personal vehicle for the full field trip time. Since the trip includes guided-driving tours we would appreciate that no other vehicles are used for the field trip. Also, because we have a full day of traveling and tours, please be considerate to other field trip participants and arrive on time for departure. 17